The LuLac Edition #3946, December 3rd, 2018
When you comment on an ongoing investigation on cases, comment on sentencing, are you not witness tampering?
The gutless Congress better get on the stick and act on this criminal activity.
Count 4 Article 1 passed against Richard Nixon should be put up against Diaper because he is impeding an investigation by the Justice Department.
The difference is this Congress is an enabler of high crimes and misdemeanors.
After accompanying the statesman and World War II veteran in the final months of his life, Sully, the late president’s service dog, lay before the casket holding what remained of him.
The display of instinctual, animalistic devotion captured the reaction to Bush’s death in a way that the words spilled all weekend over the Internet could not. Dogs, wrote the poet Emily Dickinson, “know but do not tell.”
In his knowing pose, the dog was at rest. He will accompany his person a final time, as Bush’s body is flown from Houston to Washington, CNN reported. An arrival ceremony is expected Monday at the Capitol, where Bush will lie in state in the Capitol Rotunda until Wednesday, when family members and friends will gather for a funeral at Washington National Cathedral.
Conspicuously missing from CNN and MSNBC is 41’s Vice President Dan Quayle. Quayle was a two term Senator from Indiana who was plucked from relative obscurity when Bush picked him. When the announcement was made that a two term Senator from Indiana was picked, I, like many assumed it was Dan Coates, not Dan Quayle.
When Lyndon Johnson died, Hubert Humphrey his Veep was all over the place on the three networks. When Richard Nixon died, his second Vice President and successor Gerald Ford was front and center. Since Ford’s Veep Nelson Rockefeller died before Ford, there was no Vice President to comment when Ford passed.. Of course when Ronald Reagan died in 2004, Bush 41 himself was on TV.
But unless I am wrong, I have not seen Quayle much.
He might show up at the Funeral as did Nixon first Vice President Spiro Agnew who by then was a convicted felon for over 2 decades. I hesitate to put Quayle in that category. Neither should the center left national media for not recognizing Quayle.
Quayle has been on Fox frequently since 41 died and wrote a piece for The Wall Street Journal. If he has exclusivity with Fox, fine. But the least the other two cable networks could have done is contact him to get his thoughts.
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